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MIT Professor’s Grant Withdrawal Highlights Student Activism Against Israeli Military Ties

by Emma Walker – News Editor

MIT Professor Cancels‍ Israeli ⁤Military Grant Following Student Protests

CAMBRIDGE, MA ⁤ – An MIT professor has canceled ⁢a research grant funded by the Israeli military ​after sustained pressure from‌ student activists protesting ⁣the ongoing​ conflict in Gaza, according⁣ to members of the MIT Coalition for Palestine. The cancellation marks a partial victory for students who have‌ been ⁤calling on ⁤the university to disclose and sever ties with military-funded research.

The grant ⁢cancellation comes amid increasing ⁤scrutiny of MIT’s financial relationships ⁣with ‌the Israeli military and a broader debate⁣ over academic⁤ freedom ‍and ⁣institutional duty in ‍the face of ⁣international conflict. Students have argued that research⁣ funding⁤ from the Israeli military contributes to ⁤violence⁣ in ​Palestine, while MIT administrators have defended the partnerships as vital to academic inquiry and national security.

MIT initially removed ​its “Brown Book,” which​ detailed⁤ its sponsored research, in July ‍2024, citing a⁢ need to align with federal requirements and “typical” disclosures, as reported by⁢ The tech, MIT’s student newspaper. According⁣ to MIT Coalition for Palestine member, ​Maya⁣ Halgren, the removal‌ of the ⁢Brown Book and ⁢another grant database has created a lack of transparency regarding the university’s funding sources. “There are ‌now no sources for MIT community members to ⁣see who funds our school’s ‌research,” ⁤Halgren stated.

Students began protesting ‌genocide in Gaza and calling for the university to drop Israeli military-funded research last ⁣spring.⁣ MIT President⁤ Sally Kornbluth responded in a July statement, characterizing criticisms‍ of researchers working on these projects as “willful mischaracterizations,” and asserting​ that suggestions⁤ their work was designed for ⁢conflict⁣ were “untrue.”

Despite cutting ties⁤ with⁣ other countries over human rights concerns, MIT has⁣ maintained that it‌ has⁢ “compelling reasons”​ not to sever ⁣ties with the Israeli military, as reported ⁢by ⁤ The Intercept in ‌January ‍2025.

“One contract is ⁢down, but⁤ we won’t stop ⁤until MIT ‍announces a‌ full ​research stoppage‌ for the Israeli military,” Halgren said. “As‌ a military science‍ school, MIT students and staff have a unique responsibility⁣ to stand up ‌to the U.S.-Israeli war machine and prevent more ‍horrifying violence in ‌Palestine.”

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